Alepes is a genus containing five
extant and one
extinct species. It is part of the jack family, the Carangidae are part of the
order Carangiformes. Recent
phylogenetic studies using molecular information have placed
Alepes in the subfamily Caranginae (or the tribe Carangini). The most comprehensive study suggests the genus is basal to all other 'scads' and 'horse mackerels' of the genera
Trachurus, Decapterus, and Selar, whilst still being closely affiliated with larger members of Caranginae such as
Caranx.
Alepes was first created in 1839 by the English
naturalist William Swainson, after he initially proposed it to be a
subgenus of
Trachinus, which he had created to accommodate
Trachinus melanoptera, a species he had just described.
Trachinus was invalid, however, as it was already in use for a genus of
weevers. This makes
A. melanoptera the
type species of the genus. The other species currently placed in
Alepes were not directly classified in the genus, but were transferred from other, often distantly related genera. Many of these species have numerous
junior synonyms. "Alepes" comes from the Greek word
alepis, 'without scales'. A single species has been identified from the
fossil record;
Alepes pin (Bannikov, 1985), described from the
Lower Miocene in eastern
Crimean Oblast. This area was once part of the Indian Ocean which extended well into
Europe at the time. ==Species==